This will be a forum series where I'll talk about the history and my experience with the gaming consoles I own and this time I'm reviewing a system that most of you should have played at least once in your life time, The Atari 2600 (VCS).
Atari 2600Sears 6-Switch Heavy (with box) and Sears 6-Switch Light
Atari 6-Switch Light and Atari 4-Switch (with box)
Sears 4-Switch (my first game console) and Atari 2600 "Darth Vader" with box.
Coleco Gemini, Sears Video Arcade II and Atari 2600 "Junior"
History:Released on September 1977, The system was originally named the Atari VCS (Video Computer System) Selling for $199 and only had eight games at launch. Later the system was blamed for the video game crash of 1983 when the system was flooding the market with crappy games.
How did it do?Extremely well, At launch the system did okay, but when Atari released Space Invaders the system was a huge success. The system wasn't officially discontinued til 1992. Over 30 million systems where sold in that time.
Graphics: Very simple graphics, but unlike every other consoles out at this time it blew away the competition with it's 128 color palette. Sound that came from the TV not just bleeps and bloops from the console.
Is this system still fun to play?Yes, while the system is outdated by most, it still has a charm and great games that are worth playing even today. There even people still making new games for the 2600 and pushes what anyone thought the system was capable of.
What games are worth playing? Where to start, Space Invaders, Asteroids, Defender, Defender II (also known as Stargate) Missile Command, Berzerk, Pitfall II, HERO, Dig Dug, Solaris, Frogger, Jr. Pac-Man, Ka-Boom, Keystone Kapers, Megamania, River Raid 1&2, Seaquest, Tapper, and these are just the ones I remember off the top of my head. Also I highly recommend checking out some of the homebrews. Like Halo 2600, Juno First or Pac-Man 4K. (makes the Pac-man that was released look like barf)
How many versions are there?About twelve main models, 6-switch Heavy, Sears 6-switch Heavy, 6-switch light, Sears 6-switch light, 4-switch light, Sears 4-switch light, the all black model known as the Darth Vader, short rainbow Junior, long rainbow Junior, Sears Video Arcade II, Coleco Gemini and the ultra rare Columbia Home Arcade. There's also a Japanese model known as the 2800. (I refuse to count the Atari Flashbacks) lol
What do I need to know if I start collecting this system? This system is easy to come by, only versions that are rare are the Heavy models and the Columbia Home Arcade. The Gemini and Sears Video Arcade II are pretty uncommon too. You can pick up a system for about $20-$40 on average. And games can be under a dollar to the most expensive in video game history. The system released close to 400 games and there's many variations of the game carts themselves. So know what your looking for, I'd tell any collector buy the common / good games cheap then slowly expand to find the harder to find games. The systems them selves are pretty durable but the switch consoles can have issues with their switches becoming loose and not working properly so if you find one in the wild test all the front switches if any of them don't feel right it might have issues.
My Experience with the ConsoleThis was the first Game Console I ever owned. My grandfather Bought me a Sears 4-Switch when I was about 7 years old. And I still have it to this day. I've had several Atari's over the years and I'm still missing the 6-Switch Heavy and of course the ultra rare Columbia model. I always had a soft spot for the Atari 2600, when I got old enough I used to ride my bike hitting garage sales hunting for games for it, and I picked up many rare games that at the time I had no idea that they where anything special. I love the Atari 2600 and still play it to this day. It's a console I recommend everyone play at least once in their life time. My only complaint of the console is the joysticks can feel a little stiff.
Final ThoughtsThis is a console that every video game collector should have in their collection. You don't need the rarest model or spend a ton of money hunting the rarest games, most of the best games are pretty common and will cost you a buck.
Let me know what you think, I'm planning on continuing the reviews in a somewhat order of when they came out, kinda makes you see the evolution. I'll try and have one up every weekend.
Leave reply's on your experience with the Atari 2600, I would love to hear them.
I know this is one console that some of you have to have played at least once.
By the Numbers: over 400 Atari 2600's of various models are listed in peoples collections on Vgcollect.
Past Reviews:
Coleco Telstar Arcade
RCA Studio II
Fairchild Channel F
PC-50X
Pong Consoles
Magnavox Odyssey